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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Al-Jazeera web site under attack from pro-war hackers
By Mick Ingram
1 April 2003
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The web site of the Arab news agency Al-Jazeera has been under
constant attack from hackers since the launch of its English language
site on March 24.
The English language site was widely welcomed as an alternative
to the official Western media, which is seen by many as a propaganda
vehicle of the Pentagon. Devoted to news on the war against Iraq,
it carries headlines such as US precision bomb
destroys civilian bus, Misinformation Basra
and Hunger turns Iraqi civilians against US saviours.
Among the first articles in English was an eyewitness account
of the assault on the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
Immediately following the sites launch, it began to suffer
from network outages. Internet monitoring service Keynote Systems
reported on March 25 that Al-Jazeera and its English-language
counterpart were only intermittently available for the second
straight day. From approximately 12:30 p.m. Pacific Standard Time
that day, the English news portion of the site seemingly dropped
off the Internet, according to Roopak Patel, at Keynotes
public services division.
While this was initially reported as simply being due to the
popularity of the site and the inability of Al-Jazeeras
hosting company to cope with demand, Patel stressed, Theres
a whole host of reasons that the site could not be accessible.
The server could be not able to serve up data as fast ... or it
could be an attack.
Tom Ohlsson, a representative of network performance measurement
service Matrix NetSystems, was quoted by CNET saying that in general
the company hasnt seen signs of serious hacking since the
start of the war.
We were prepared to see malicious worms and viruses launched
in conjunction with whats going on in Iraq, but we arent
seeing anything like that. There is no (widespread) disruption
of traffic across the Internet, Ohlsson said.
As the sites remained inaccessible for the third day in a row,
it was reported that Al-Jazeera had been hit by a distributed
denial-of-service (DDOS) attack that began March 25. A DDOS attack
involves the flooding of a network with data from any number of
computers around the world. Hackers increasingly make use of compromised
home PCs with permanent broadband connections to the Internet
to launch the offending data packets. The attack is hard to detect
as the data is nearly indistinguishable from that normally created
by Web users.
By far the most serious problem for Al-Jazeera came on March
27 when the site was replaced with an American flag and a pro-US
message which read, Let Freedom Ring! and GOD
BLESS OUR TROOPS!!! The hacker signed the page Patriot
and claimed to be part of a group called the Freedom Cyber Force
Militia.
Defacement of web sites is a regular pastime for hackers. According
to defacement tracker Zone-H.org, attackers who tag Web sites
with digital graffiti normally want the world to know and so immediately
notify sites like Zone-H.org of the defacement. Zone-H will immediately
make a copy of the Web site and keep the copy as evidence of the
defacement.
On an average workday, 350 sites are defaced, with as many
as 1,000 sites defaced in an average weekend. After US strikes
began on Iraq, those numbers increased significantly. Zone-H.org
is now seeing as many as 2,500 sites defaced every day by both
pro-war and antiwar hackers.
Such defacement is not normally difficult for a webmaster to
deal with, involving only the restoration of the original data
and the tracking down and fixing of the security hole used by
the hacker to prevent it happening again. The attack on Al-Jazeera,
however, was no ordinary defacement. The address of the site had
been hijacked to point to another server carrying the hackers
message.
The actual defacement appeared on a free web site service provided
by NetWorld Connections. Technically known as a redirect,
the hack caused web browsers that attempted to go to the domain
name www.aljazeera.netas well as the English-language siteto
be surreptitiously redirected to the content hosted on NetWorlds
servers.
Networld became aware of the attack on the morning of March
27 when it detected a spike in traffic. An email from a security
specialist confirmed that visitors to Al-Jazeera were being redirected
to NetWorlds service, according to Ken Bowman, chief executive
of the Salt Lake City company.
We pulled down the content immediately, Bowman
said, adding that VeriSign, which administers the domain registry,
eliminated the redirect later in the morning. They never
even touched [Al-Jazeeras] site, he said.
The attack resulted from the compromising of Al-Jazeeras
account with VeriSign subsidiary Network Solutions. The hacker
changed the web sites nameservers to point to those of MyDomain.com,
a free hosting service. In a press statement issued March 27,
the company said, MyDomain has learned from NavLink, the
company that hosts the aljazeera.net web site from its data centres
in France, that Al-Jazeeras domain name account at Network
Solutions was compromised.
The problem was corrected by eliminating the redirect and reinstating
the correct addresses for Al-Jazeeras sites. However, the
changes take up to three days to filter throughout the Internet.
Al-Jazeeras sites continue to come under DDOS attacks.
The FBI has said it has launched an investigation into the
attack, but there is little chance that the perpetrators will
be identified. The hackers had chosen their target for the hosting
of the faked site well. NetWorlds Bowman explained that
the site had been created using a free hosting service that the
company offers. Because the service is free, the company does
not keep rigorous watch on the activities of its users.
All the supplied information was fictitious, he
said. Its a free site, so we dont track any
data. We dont track the Internet addresses or anything else.
It would take a staff of about 500 to do so. Bowman said
NetWorld are analysing what happened and may change the way the
free portion of the site is administered to prevent future incidents.
Far more worrying is the fact that the records of Verisign,
one of the leading providers of secure web services, were compromised.
VeriSign maintains the Internet registry for the .com, .net,
.cc and .tv top-level domains and administers the authoritative
database for all domain names registered in those top-level domains
after acquiring Network Solutions, the company originally given
authority of the domains by the US government when the Internet
became a public network.
The records from the whois databasethe distributed
directory that holds information about each domainindicated
early on March 27 that hackers had managed to forge new domain
records. Such records typically describe the services that are
offered by a particular domain, such as web, mail and file hosting.
VeriSigns records for Al-Jazeera had been replaced by data
that pointed to name servers hosted by MyDomain.com. Those name
servers in turn referred web requests to the defacement site located
at NetWorld.
The company boasts on its web site, VeriSigns critical
infrastructure services deliver an unmatched level of security
and reliability to Internet and telecommunications customers around
the world. Nearly all of the Fortune 500 companies, governmental
bodies and other organisations, hundreds of thousands of small
businesses, and hundreds of service providers rely on VeriSign
to engage in digital commerce and communications. The site
carries no explanation of how Al-Jazeeras records were forged.
Given the hostility of the US government towards Al-Jazeera,
it is difficult to see anything coming from the investigation
of the FBI. The way in which the attack was carried out indicates
that this was no ordinary hack. While most defacements involve
hacking into the server that hosts the site and changing the sites
content, this one targeted the domain name itself, ensuring that
administrators at NavLink could do nothing to restore the site.
To compromise the Verisign servers would take a high degree
of specialist knowledge. It is a tradition among established hackers
to use a known nickname in order to take credit for a hack. It
is hard to believe that those responsible for such a prestigious
achievement would not do the same, but security experts familiar
with the defacement scene say they have never heard of a group
called Freedom Cyber Force Militiasuggesting it may be a
cover for some other organisation and/or individuals.
See Also:
Another market massacre in
Baghdad
[31 March 2003]
Baghdad market massacre sheds
ghastly light on nature of US invasion
[28 March 2003]
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